Prof. Makau Mutua and Dr. David Ndii have one massive thing in common: their understanding of a "presidential system of government" is that under the current Constitution of Kenya, the president's mandate under Article 132 is expansive, and should not be fettered by constitutional and statutory interpretations regarding transparency or fiscal prudence. Obviously, the Katiba Institute is of a contrary opinion.
The constitutional and statutory limits of the the president's mandate under Article 132 will be canvassed by legal teams all the way to the Supreme Court and the decision by the High Court to annul the appointment of twenty-one advisors will not be the subject of this screed. Instead, we can attempt to examine why Prof. Mutua and Dr. Ndii are expending so much energy to re-establish the imperial presidency Kenyans buried on the 27th August, 2010.
Prof. Mutua's volte-face is particularly surprising; Dr. Ndii's not so much. The latter has been pretty open about his motives and motivations, and by and large, he has achieved his objectives. Prof. Mutua spent a considerable amount of his professional live as a lawyer, constitutional expert, political commentator and sounding board to the political opposition in staunch opposition to the establishment, perpetuation and expansion of an imperial presidency. He has cavilled against the idea that a president has the freest hand in how he forms his government, whom he appoints, what he pays them, and what the presidency is allowed to do without seeking a popular mandate from the electorate (or the citizenry) to do it.
Prof. Mutua is one of the dozens of constitutional thinkers who shaped the language in Article 10 of the Constitution, particularly the inclusion of the words "sharing and devolution of power, the rule of law, democracy and participation of the people" in paragraph (a) of clause (2) of Article 10. Prof. Mutua's inclusion among the coterie of advisors appointed by the president, to advise him on constitutional affairs, was a surprise, particularly as the president had among his team Mr. Kennedy Ogeto, the former Solicitor-General, to advise him on the same matters and, more importantly, the president has ready access, day and night and on short notice, to the Attorney-General and the entirety of the State Law Office.
It was clear that Prof. Mutua was taken on as part of the president's rapprochement with the late Prime Minister, Raila Odinga, which rapidly took shape after the 2024 anti-Finance-Bill Gen Z protests. Mr. Odinga got the chance to include in the Cabinet and the Executive office of the President his acolytes and confidants, such as Prof. Mutua. Had Prof. Mutua carried on in the same vein he had when he was advising Mr. Odinga on what we needed to do to live up to the highest ideals of the Constitution, we would not be having this conversation. But he seems to have adopted the president's and the president's other advisors' views on the expansive powers conferred by Article 132, and set aside his own long-held views on the need to limit presidential power. The dissonance is blindingly glaring.
Dr. Ndii's position is not untenable. He is a political mercenary. If he ends up being paid a pretty shilling, that is the price we pay for not waging a successful counter-insurgency against his political machinations. I will not begrudge him his victories just as I will not begrudge Katiba Institute its successes in the High Court against Dr. Ndii. But for Prof. Mutua, one must wonder: did he ever believe any of the things he said and wrote in his decades in the constitutional wilderness with the fighters of the Second Liberation and the army of constitutional lawyers who made impassioned submissions on the need to limit the power of the imperial presidency?
It is a truism that once a person is sucked into the very heart of the Government, it is almost inevitable that they will be seduced by the power, pomp and circumstance. Nothing quite prepares you for the way the power is wielded and how it shapes destinies. It is quite devastatingly powerful and few can resist its allure. You snap your fingers, and shit gets done. Doors are flung open for you. Red-carpet treatment is laid out for you. Everyone - and I mean, everyone - answers your phone calls. Promptly. And if you have a keen ear, you will hear them answer your phone calls at attention. It is enough for you to start thinking, "I deserve this. I am meant to be here. This is what I was made to be." Until Katiba Institute blows up your dreams into a million pieces. We should heed the warning by John Emerich Edward Dalberg-Acton, 1st Baron Acton, 13th Marquess of Groppoli.